By : JENNE LAJIUN
KOTA KINABALU: Deputy Works
Minister Datuk Rosnah Abdul Rashid Shirlin hopes the Trans-Borneo Highway will
become a reality during her five years tenure at the ministry.
The project, which will link
Sabah with Sarawak and Brunei, has been planned since 2006 but is yet to be
completed.
“I don’t want it to remain
merely a plan. I want to see it comes true. And I feel my minister, (Datuk
Fadillah Yusof) who hails from Sarawak, feels the same way,” she said when met
by The Borneo Post at the Kota Kinabalu International Airport (KKIA) upon her
arrival from Kuala Lumpur yesterday.
She described the project as
the ministry’s biggest challenge in the future.
“We need to see that it will
not just take off but is actually achieved … we want it to be resolved and take
off because Sabah and Sarawak are both huge states and in need of this
infrastructure,” said Rosnah, who is also the first woman Deputy Works Minister.
The length of the entire
highway in Malaysia is estimated to be 2,083 kilometers.
Aside from that, Rosnah also
said that as Sabah and Sarawak were still left behind in terms of
infrastructure, more attention should be given for their development.
“Attention has to be given
to the two without ignoring the rest of the states in Semenanjung (West
Malaysia),” she said.
She also spoke of her new
portfolio in the Works Ministry, stating that it was a far cry from the
responsibilities she had when she was Deputy Health Minister.
“In terms of the structure
of the ministry itself, it is totally different from Health (Ministry).
“ The Public Works
Department deals more with structure issue, and I would love to see the
problems affecting Sabah and Sarawak reduced and be at par with Semenanjung
because we are very much in need of infrastructure,” she said.
She added that she will be
meeting with Chief Minister Datuk Seri Musa Haji Aman, Deputy Chief Minister
Tan Sri Joseph Pairin Kitingan and the Assistant Minister Datuk Ghulam Haidar
Khan Bahadar to discuss on how they can work together for the state’s progress.
Rosnah also commented on the
decision of Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak to select three women
from Sabah as deputy ministers at three distinct ministries.
Aside from Rosnah, two other
women appointed by Najib were Datuk Azizah Mohd Dun (Deputy Women, Family and
Community Development Minister) and Datuk Mary Yap (Deputy Education and Higher
Education Minister).
“I am glad. I was expecting Datuk
Azizah to be a full minister, but unfortunately, belum rezeki Sabah (it is not
yet Sabah’s luck), although Sarawak has two women full ministers.
“But it is an honour for us
and a recognition for Sabah.
“It is very sweet for me –
Azizah is representing the Wanita Umno, Mary represents PBS (Parti Bersatu
Sabah) and myself, Puteri Umno – so I think it’s due recognition by the
president of the party and the prime minister.
“We believe he has
aspirations to let us work and to see that we, women can contribute as well as
the men. I am looking forward to that.
“It is a big challenge for
all three of us as the ministry we are in is not easy.
“Education has its
challenges, and Women, Family and Community Development has its own challenges
and of course, the Works Ministry.
“We shouldn’t look at it in
this way – that there was no full minister position given to our women, but
rather view it in a perspective that the ministries given to us, the Sabahan
women are very challenging indeed,” she said.
“This, for me, is a
recognition that the women of Sabah can contribute. These ministries used to be
headed by merely men.
“Now only Datuk Rahim (Datuk
Abdul Rahim Bakri, Deputy Defence Minister) is flanked by the three of us
(women) and then there are the six full ministers. It is a good number.
“It is an achievement for
Sabah itself.
“It is historical,” said the
Papar Member of Parliament. (BP)
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